4.7 Article

Coupling Cell Communication and Optogenetics: Implementation of a Light-Inducible Intercellular System in Yeast

Journal

ACS SYNTHETIC BIOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.2c00338

Keywords

cell communication; optogenetics; synthetic biology; yeast; pheromone

Funding

  1. ANID-Millennium Science Initiative Program [ICN17_022]
  2. Howard Hughes International Research Scholar program
  3. ANID-FONDECYT grant [1211715]
  4. ANID-Ph.D. scholarship [21170331]

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Cell communication is a widespread mechanism in biology for transmitting information about environmental conditions. In this study, cell communication and optogenetics were coupled in yeast to modulate gene expression. The results showed that external light information can be propagated through diffusible signaling molecules to regulate gene expression in a synthetic system involving microbial cells.
Cell communication is a widespread mechanism in biology, allowing the transmission of information about environmental conditions. In order to understand how cell communication modulates relevant biological processes such as survival, division, differentiation, and apoptosis, different synthetic systems based on chemical induction have been successfully developed. In this work, we coupled cell communication and optogenetics in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Our approach is based on two strains connected by the light-dependent production of alpha- factor pheromone in one cell type, which induces gene expression in the other type. After the individual characterization of the different variants of both strains, the optogenetic intercellular system was evaluated by combining the cells under contrasting illumination conditions. Using luciferase as a reporter gene, specific co-cultures at a 1:1 ratio displayed activation of the response upon constant blue light, which was not observed for the same cell mixtures grown in darkness. Then, the system was assessed at several dark/blue-light transitions, where the response level varies depending on the moment in which illumination was delivered. Furthermore, we observed that the amplitude of response can be tuned by modifying the initial ratio between both strains. Finally, the two-population system showed higher fold inductions in comparison with autonomous strains. Altogether, these results demonstrated that external light information is propagated through a diffusible signaling molecule to modulate gene expression in a synthetic system involving microbial cells, which will pave the road for studies allowing optogenetic control of population-level dynamics.

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